MIFTAH
Monday, 1 July. 2024
 
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Six months after the formation of the current government, the majority supports the formation of a national unity government as a way out of the current crisis; popularity of Fatah and Hamas are almost the same as the public loses confidence in the political leaders

  • A public opinion poll conducted by the Jerusalem Media and Communications Center (JMCC) during the period between 19 and 22 September 2006 shows that the majority of the sample (55.9%) support the formation of a national unity government of all factions as a way out of the current crisis while (15.2%) view the solution in holding early legislative and presidential elections and (13.5%) of the Palestinian public say dissolving the PNA is the best option to get out of the crisis.

  • The poll with a sample of 1,200 persons (760 in the West Bank and 440 in Gaza Strip) showed that the two major Palestinian factions Fateh and Hamas enjoy almost the same degree of popularity. When asked to which faction they would vote in case the elections are held today, (32%) of the respondents said they would vote for Fatah and (30.5%) of the sample said they would vote for the Change and Reform Bloc whereas (21.9%) said they will not participate in the elections.

  • When asked to what extent they trust the Palestinian political figures, the opinions of the respondents varied on this matter but the majority (28.3%) said they don’t trust anyone while the main political leaders on the arena got varying degrees of trust with the current PM Ismail Haniyeh coming in the first place with (18.9%) followed by President Mahmoud Abbas who got the trust of (14.5%) of the Palestinian public. Marwan Barghouthi, Fateh Secretary who is detained in the Israeli prisons, came in the third place with (4.5%) followed by Head of Hamas Politburo Khaled Mash'al who got 3.3%.

  • With regards to the performance of the current government, significant decline was noted at the level of assessing the performance when compared with a similar poll conducted by the JMCC three months ago. (27.5%) said that the performance of Council of Ministers is good in this poll compared to (21.8%) in September 2006. During the same period, the percentage of Palestinians who said the performance of the Palestinian Legislative Council is good declined from (32.2%) to (24%). The general performance of the security services also witnessed same trend from (23.1%) in June 2006 to (16.8%) in September 2006. These results come at a time when the strike of the civil servants continues because of no salaries. When asked about their opinion on the strike, the majority of the respondents (79.6%) expressed sympathy with the strike while (20.4%) said they were not sympathetic with the strike.

  • Jerusalem Media and Communications Center explored the viewpoints of the public on the issue of the recent Israeli war on Lebanon and the Hezbollah experience in resistance. (76.3%) of the respondents said Hezbollah won in the Lebanon war while only (2.3%) said Israel won in that war and (18.8%) said neither party achieved a decisive victory. On the possibility of cloning Hezbollah experience in resistance in action inside the Palestinian territories,(59.3%) supported the idea while (31.7%) opposed it. When asked about their viewpoint on deployment of international troops in the PNA territories similar to the situation in South Lebanon, (34.7%) supported the idea while (60.5%) opposed the presence of such troops.

    Highlights

    First: the national unity government is the solution to the political crisis

  • A majority of the Palestinian public (55.9%) believe that the best option to get out of the current crisis lies in the formation of a national unity government while (15.2%) said the way out of the current crisis lies in early legislative and presidential elections. (3.5%) supported the dissolving of the PNA and (6.5%) of the Palestinian public support the formation of a technocrat government.

  • The poll showed that a large majority of the Palestinian public (63.6%) expresses sympathy with the strike of the PNA employees who have not received their salaries while those against the strike didn’t exceed (15.1%).

  • The Palestinian public seemed divided on who can present a better Prime Minister; (39.4%) preferred to see a PM from Hamas Movement while (41.4%) said they prefer a PM from Fatah Movement.

    Second: decline in assessment of the performance of the government six months after its formation:

  • Six months after its formation, there has been noted a retreat in the assessment of the performance of the government compared with its performance three months after its formation; the retreat was noted in the following basic aspects:

  • Palestinians who rate the performance of the Council of Ministers as good decreased from (27.5%) in June 2006 to reach (21.8%) in September 2006. The assessment of the PM's performance went down from (43.9%) who said his performance was good in June 2006 to (35.8%) in September 2006.

  • There has been a notable decrease in the ratio of Palestinians who rated the performance of the education sector as good from (50.2%) in June 2006 to (33.0%) in September 2006. with regards to the assessment of the general performance of the security services, it went down from (23.1%) to (16.8%) for the same period. The same trend applies to various degrees to the ministries of social affairs, interior and traffic and registration department.

  • The assessment of the performance of the PNA TV and Radio witnessed a significant decrease from (37%) to (27.1)% for the Radio and from (35.3%) to (27.3%) for the TV.

    Third: Relative consistency on public trust in political and religious figures and factions

  • Despite the decrease in the assessment of the government performance, the changes at the level of balance of forces between the factions and figures were not dramatic as the assessment didn’t include the hard nucleus of those factions but part of the floating public.

  • The ratio of Palestinians who said they will vote for the Change and Reform Bloc if elections were to happen today remain unchanged at (30.5%) while those who said they will vote Fatah Bloc went down slightly from (33.2%) in June to (32%) in this poll.

  • With regards to the level of trust in the factions – which is an open trend question in all public opinion polls conducted by the JMCC, the divisions in the Palestinian public opinion remain unchanged as (30.7%) said they trust Fatah most while (29.7%) said they trust Hamas more.

  • The phenomenon of having no leader to gain the trust of the majority of the Palestinians persisted. Those who trust PM Ismail Haniyeh reached (18.9%) only while President Mahmoud Abbas got the trust of (14.5%) followed by Marwan Barghouthi who got (4.5%) support and Khaled Mash'al came in the fourth place with (3.3%) while those who trust no one show certain increase from (27%) to reach (38.3%) in this poll.

    Fourth: consistency in differences in opinions between Gaza and the West Bank

  • It is notable to mention that the differences in opinions between the West Bank and Gaza Strip on several issues continues to exist:

  • The majority (62.3%) of Palestinians in Gaza said the security chaos incidents increased six months after the current government assumed its positions while (38.6%) of Palestinians in the West Bank say the same thing.

  • While (32%) of the Palestinians in Gaza said the formation of Haniyeh's government pushed the current reforms forward, only (24.2%) of the Palestinians in the West Bank believe the same thing. (10.2%) of the Palestinians in Gaza say the performance of the security services is good while (20.5%) in the West Bank say the same. Those who believe the performance of the current government has improved in comparison with the previous government reached (26.8%) in Gaza while in the West Bank it was (19.2%).

  • Finally, the same trend was illustrated in the status of factions and parties; those who will vote for Hamas if elections were to happen today reached (33.4%) in Gaza compared with (28.8%) in the West Bank.

  • Variance in viewpoints also was clear in the level of sympathy with the strike of the civil servants where (57.3%) of Palestinians in Gaza supported the strike compared with (67.2%) in the West Bank.

    Fifth: assessment of changes in positions and thoughts regarding the basic issues

  • A rise was noted in the degrees of extremism in political positions and tendencies towards violence as shown in the results of the relevant questions. The public is moving towards extremism as the ratio of Palestinians who believe that the two-state solution (Palestine and Israel) is the best solution for the Palestinian cause from (52.4%) in June to (46.6%) in September 2006. With regards to attitudes towards military action, there is consistency in level of support to military operations against Israel targets (43.1%) while there is a slight increase in the ratio of Palestinians who support suicide bombings against Israeli civilians from (44.8%) in June 2006 to (48%) in September 2006.

    To View the Full Result as PDF (160 KB)

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